WASHINGTON,
Jan. 2010 –
Defense
Secretary
Robert M.
Gates will
stay in office
for at least
another year,
Pentagon Press
Secretary
Geoff Morrell
confirmed
yesterday.
Gates
met with
President
Barack Obama
before
Christmas and
committed to
another year
on the job,
Morrell said.
Then-President
George W. Bush
nominated
Gates for the
job in
December 2006,
and Obama
asked the
secretary to
remain as
defense
secretary when
his
administration
began in
January 2009.
Gates is the
only Cabinet
member to span
both
administrations.
Gates has
worked to
remake the way
the Defense
Department
does business,
and another
year in office
will give him
another
opportunity to
shape the
department’s
budget. In the
fiscal 2010
budget, for
example, the
secretary
recommended
ending the
F-22 Raptor
program and
concentrating
on the F-35
Lightning II
joint strike
fighter. He
also ended the
Army’s
Future Combat
System and
pledged the
money to other
Army programs.
He drove the
effort to buy
and rapidly
deploy
mine-resistant,
ambush-protected
vehicles to
protect
servicemembers
in Iraq from
roadside bombs
and to provide
all-terrain
versions of
the vehicles
for troops in
Afghanistan.
Gates took
over at a
tough time for
the
department.
The troop
surge in Iraq
was just
getting under
way, and
casualties in
the fighting
were mounting.
Gates also was
in charge when
revelations
about
substandard
conditions at
Walter Reed
Army Medical
Center came
out. He fired
the Army
secretary, the
service’s
surgeon
general and
the commander
at the
facility. He
has
concentrated
attention on
care for
wounded
warriors and
putting in
place systems
so the Defense
Department and
the Department
of Veterans
Affairs can
work together.
Amid concerns
over the Air
Force’s
handling of
its nuclear
weapons, Gates
asked for and
received the
resignations
of the
service’s
secretary and
chief of staff
in June 2008.
More recently,
Gates has been
instrumental
in developing
the new
Afghanistan-Pakistan
strategy.
As with any
appointed
official,
Morrell noted,
Gates serves
at the
pleasure of
the president.
“[The
president and
Gates] agreed
to revisit
this issue
again later
this year, but
for all
intents and
purposes,
their original
agreement
still stands:
he serves at
the pleasure
of the
president
indefinitely,
and he is
honored to do
so, though he
certainly
looks forward
to one day
retiring to
his family
home in the
Pacific
Northwest,”
Morrell said.